TUCSON — With Troy Tulowitzki cemented as the Rockies’ shortstop for arguably the next decade, the Orioles and Angels are among the teams monitoring Clint Barmes this spring, hoping he becomes available in a trade.

The Orioles are looking for an everyday shortstop, while the Angels view Barmes as a reserve. Colorado, though, hasn’t made Barmes available. He has hit well this spring — a .333 average after going 2-for-2 on Monday in the Rockies’ 10-9 loss to Arizona — and remains the favorite to land the Rockies’ utility job.

Reliever Brian Fuentes also is attracting interest, with the Yankees keeping an eye on him. They had a scout at Monday’s game as Fuentes threw a scoreless fifth inning. Rockies general manager Dan O’Dowd confirmed Monday there is “zero chance” he would trade the setup man right now.

Pitching adjustments.

Lefty Mark Redman, a candidate for one of the last two spots in the Rockies’ rotation, made a needed adjustment Monday.

Working a morning “B” game against the White Sox, Redman threw four scoreless innings. Aided by pitching coach Bob Apodaca, Redman tweaked his mechanics, making his cut fastball much more effective. Last week against San Diego, he got hammered for six runs and 10 hits.

Johnson’s debut.

Just 16 wins shy of 300, Arizona’s Randy Johnson left his spring debut encouraged. Johnson, returning from back surgery, threw 1 1/3 innings and allowed four hits, including a three-run homer to Chris Iannetta.

“I didn’t kill any batters,” Johnson said before adding, “I know people are waiting and wondering when that rubberband is going to snap. It’s motivation. I don’t want to be a question mark.”

Vizcaino is back.

Monday morning, Luis Vizcaino eased all concerns about his tight right elbow, throwing all his pitches in a bullpen session. The offseason’s biggest acquisition — his $7.5 million contract is the largest the Rockies have ever given a reliever — will pitch Wednesday.

Four assistant basketball coaches at Division I schools and a top Adidas executive were among 10 people charged Tuesday with crimes including bribery and fraud as part of a wide-ranging federal investigation into corruption in college basketball.

CenturyLink, the telecommunications company that ended its sponsorship agreement with Broncos linebacker Brandon Marshall because of his protests during the national anthem last year, said it will not terminate its agreement with current client Emmanuel Sanders.